| Literature DB >> 22888439 |
Jennifer V Pope1, Jonathan A Edlow.
Abstract
Approximately 5% of patients presenting to emergency departments have neurological symptoms. The most common symptoms or diagnoses include headache, dizziness, back pain, weakness, and seizure disorder. Little is known about the actual misdiagnosis of these patients, which can have disastrous consequences for both the patients and the physicians. This paper reviews the existing literature about the misdiagnosis of neurological emergencies and analyzes the reason behind the misdiagnosis by specific presenting complaint. Our goal is to help emergency physicians and other providers reduce diagnostic error, understand how these errors are made, and improve patient care.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22888439 PMCID: PMC3410308 DOI: 10.1155/2012/949275
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Med Int ISSN: 2090-2840 Impact factor: 1.112
Some reasons for misdiagnosis in patients with neurological emergencies.
| Headache | Dizziness | Back Pain | Weakness | Seizure | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| History | Patients use words like “migraine” and “sinus infection” that may mislead the physician. | The use of the word “vertigo” versus other dizziness descriptors is not etiologically useful. | Patients use word “sciatica” which may lead physicians to diagnose sciatica. | Stroke patients may complain of “clumsiness” or “my arm felt like lead” rather than “weakness”. | Patient (or witness) says “seizure” after a faint |
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| Physical exam | Patients with SAH may be well appearing and neurologically intact. | Patients with small posterior circulation strokes can mimic a peripheral vestibular presentation. | Patients with serious causes of back pain can present without neurological deficits. | Patients with stroke can present with just about any focal deficit depending upon the occluded vessel. Myasthenia patients' symptoms wax and wane. | Patients may be lethargic, but neurologically intact. |
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| Diagnostic testing | For SAH, CT sensitivity is good but decays with time. | CT is a poor test for cerebellar and brainstem infarction | No MRI available | False normal CT in early stroke | EEG often not available in the emergency department. Not performing LP in seizure patients who may have encephalitis or neurocysticercosis. |
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| Preconceived notions | Headache improved with triptans so is not a serious secondary cause. | Posterior circulation strokes are obvious or devastating events | All patients with SEA have risk factors or fever, or neurological deficits | Young people do not get strokes | Seizures (or seizure-like movements) are sometimes seen with strokes. |
CVST: cerebral venous sinus thrombosis, SAH: subarachnoid hemorrhage, CT: CAT scan, MRI: magnetic resonance imaging, SEA: spinal epidural abscess.